Database error: Row handle referred to a deleted row or a row marked for deletion

  • It's not a SQL Server issue or error, doesn't have anything to do with SQL Server.  It's an ADO recordset issue/error. You don't have the current recordset at the time you movenext. It's been too long that I have no idea how to address that. Some way to requery or use a different recordset type is all I can think of.
    No idea what is a good ADO forum either but that would be where you would want to post this.

    Sue

  • Sue_H - Friday, January 20, 2017 3:32 PM

    It's not a SQL Server issue or error, doesn't have anything to do with SQL Server.  It's an ADO recordset issue/error. You don't have the current recordset at the time you movenext. It's been too long that I have no idea how to address that. Some way to requery or use a different recordset type is all I can think of.
    No idea what is a good ADO forum either but that would be where you would want to post this.

    Sue

    Hi Sue, I had similar thoughts this was a ADO recordset issue but it doesn't occur with Access and didn't occur for this client with this same piece of code until recently  so I didn't want to rewrite the code if the problem exists in some ADO driver that only allows a limited number of record sets to be returned.  What's strange is that this code doesn't fail with 1 in the record set, just 2 or more so the movenext should fail with 1 too.  I'm not that familiar with this forum so if you know of a more focused post area let me know.

  • scott 87260 - Friday, January 20, 2017 3:52 PM

    Hi Sue, I had similar thoughts this was a ADO recordset issue but it doesn't occur with Access and didn't occur for this client with this same piece of code until recently  so I didn't want to rewrite the code if the problem exists in some ADO driver that only allows a limited number of record sets to be returned.  What's strange is that this code doesn't fail with 1 in the record set, just 2 or more so the movenext should fail with 1 too.  I'm not that familiar with this forum so if you know of a more focused post area let me know.

    Everyone always blames the database....🙂
    The error comes from the OLE DB provider itself. Being that you would use different providers for Access than for SQL Server and being that Access <> SQL Server, they aren't going to behave the same. Similar but not the same. Years ago, SQL Server supported things with the recordsets that Access did not. I have no idea if that's still true.
    And drivers/providers/frameworks get updated so you can have scenarios where the database doesn't change but other pieces do which can affect the functionality and then you see new errors. And as I type this I thought of one other thing that can contribute to that issue - if the table doesn't have a primary key.  
    But I would just search on the error message and see what you find.

    Sue

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